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[[File:Forbidden-tobu.jpg|right|thumb|400px|Model of the Forbidden City at Tobu World Square, near [[Nikko|Nikkô]] in Japan]]
 
*''Other Names'': 故宮 ''(gùgōng / kokyuu)''
 
*''Other Names'': 故宮 ''(gùgōng / kokyuu)''
 
*''Chinese/Japanese'': 紫禁城 ''(zǐjīnchéng / shikinjou)''
 
*''Chinese/Japanese'': 紫禁城 ''(zǐjīnchéng / shikinjou)''
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The Palace Museum, established in 1925 after the Forbidden City became public/state property, is one of the largest and most major museums in the world. At the height of Qing imperial collecting, it's believed the imperial collections contained as many as 1.1 million objects.<ref name=changhong82/>
 
The Palace Museum, established in 1925 after the Forbidden City became public/state property, is one of the largest and most major museums in the world. At the height of Qing imperial collecting, it's believed the imperial collections contained as many as 1.1 million objects.<ref name=changhong82/>
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Roughly 1.5 million of the items housed at China's first national museum, the Antiques Exhibition Hall (est. [[1913]]), are held at the Palace Museum today.<ref>Guo Changhong, 83.</ref>
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Roughly 1.5 million of the items housed at China's first national museum, the Antiques Exhibition Hall (est. [[1913]]), are held at the Palace Museum today. Roughly 650,000 additional objects from imperial collections (and held for a time at the Exhibition Hall) were brought to [[Taiwan]] in 1948-1949 by the Republic of China government. While some eight million imperial court records and other documents from the palace archives were transferred to the First Historical Archives, some 380,000 were also moved to Taiwan.<ref>Guo Changhong, 83.</ref>
    
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